Kansas city gay pride festival
KC PrideFest ADULT ONE Night ADMISSION
NON-REFUNDABLE
Non-Refundable Ticket
This ticket is non-refundable, non-cancellable, and non-transferable after purchase. The delivery of the service is completed upon receiving this ticket by email.
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Theis Park, 4800 Oak St, Kansas City
Missouri 64110, United States
Jun 07, 2024 5:00 pm - Jun 09, 2024 5:00 pm CDT
June 09th, 2024 at 5:00 pm CDT
Ticket provides one ADULT admission to KC PrideFest 2024 on ONE DAY of the event.
KC PrideFest CHILD ONE Evening ADMISSION
You need to handpick one of the obeying ticket first: KC PrideFest ADULT ONE DAY ADMISSION
NON-REFUNDABLE
Non-Refundable Ticket
This ticket is non-refundable, non-cancellable, and non-transferable after purchase. The delivery of the service is completed upon receiving this ticket by email.
Choose time slots
Kansas City Pridefest 2025: What you desire to know
KANSAS Urban area, Mo. — Kansas City Pridefest is celebrating 50 years in Kansas Urban area with this year’s event.
This year’s Pridefest kicks off at 5 p.m. on Friday, June 6, with an opening night celebration at Theis Park in Kansas City, Missouri.
Kansas City Pridefest 2025: What you necessitate to know
The event continues with the 2025 Pride March from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. The parade starts at Westport Road and Broadway Boulevard and makes its way down Broadway before turning east and concluding at Theis Park.
Additional events are planned from noon to 10 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., also at Theis Park.
LINK |2025 KC Pridefest schedule of events
Throughout the event, shuttle buses will transport festival-goers from several parking garages in the area to the drop-off located at 4800 Rockhill Road.
Attendees can park in any of the nine public parking garages on the Country Club Plaza, the University of Missouri - Kansas City Cherry Road Garage (Levels 2 and above) and at the Church of the Resurrection in Brookside, 5144 Oak Street.
Motorists will want to arrange for extra period getting around the area during the week
Join KC PrideFest 2025 for its milestone 50th anniversary celebration themed "Bold & Gold." This event honors the history and progress of Kansas City's LGBTQIA+ community. Kickoff your experience with the city's largest-ever Pride Parade, starting at 11:00 AM from Westport Street and Broadway Boulevard, ending at Theis Park. The park hosts dynamic festival activities across the weekend, featuring exist entertainment from local and national artists, diverse vendors, and family-friendly offerings. Unique highlights include the "KC's Got Pride" talent competition with a $5,000 grand prize and the KC Pride Royalty Court Pageant. Free parking and shuttle services are obtainable for ease of access, making it convenient for attendees of all abilities. Festivities are uncover and welcoming for everyone, creating a vibrant communal territory of visibility and advocacy. Celebrate five decades of cohesion and achievements with a weekend of engaging events and spirited celebration.
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Kansas City PrideFest celebrates 50th anniversary despite hostile politics and sponsor losses
In June 1975, Kansas City held its very first three day Pride Festival. The event, organized by groups like the Gay People’s Union and Kansas City Women’s Liberation Union, featured picnics, dancing and live entertainment at a team of houses just off 39th and Paseo.
This year’s KC PrideFest will celebrate 50 years of Pride in Kansas City. But the celebration will take place in an increasingly hostile political climate for the festival and the groups it celebrates — bringing mixed emotions for organizers like James Moran of Our Spot KC.
“On the one hand, I'm honored to be doing the same kind of function that the people I stare up to were doing in their day,” Moran told KCUR’s Up To Date. “At the same time, it's quite something to still have to be doing it half a century later.”
In addition to increased political tension, this year’s PrideFest is also battling a severe decline in sponsorship money, which organizers blame on anti-DEI and anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric from President Donald Trump and his administration.
“We've had sponsors that have gone from amounts as large as $25